Chapter 5: Populations Sections 1 and 2.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Section 5-1 Characteristics of Populations
Advertisements

Additional notes… Populations & Growth, Limiting Factors
Populations. Populations: groups of individuals that belong to the same species and live in the same area.
Chapter 5 Populations. Biotic Potential: The size a population would reach if all offspring were to survive and reproduce.
Populations & Limits to Growth. Characteristics of a Population  Geographic Distribution: area inhabited by a population bacteria: 1 cm 3 whale: millions.
How populations grow How do ecologists study population ?
Populations How they grow and what affects them. Characteristics of a Population Population Density ◦ How many organisms in a specific area Geographic.
CHAPTER 5 ~ POPULATIONS 5-1 HOW POPULATIONS GROW.
Warm-up What can cause the population numbers of a species to change?
Populations A group of individuals of the same species that live in the same area.
Populations Group of individuals that belong to the same species and live in the same area Chapter 5 California Biology Science Standards B1 6.b. Students.
Chapter 5 Populations 5-1 How Populations Grow page 119
Populations Unit 2: Ecology. Populations Population—a group of individuals of the same species that live in the same area.
4 CHARACTERISTICS OF A POPULATION 1.Geographic Distribution/ Range- How much area does the population cover? 2.Density- How many members of the population.
Chapter 5 How Populations Grow. Characteristics of Populations  Population density  The number of individuals per unit area.  Varies depending on the.
Chapter 5 Section 1 How Populations Grow Objectives: -List the characteristics used to describe a population -Identify factors that affect population size.
POPULATION. What is a population? All the members of the same species that live in the same area. 3 Characteristics of any population: 1. Population Density.
How populations grow and Limits to growth. Three important characteristics of a population are 1. Geographic distribution 2. Density 3. Growth rate Characteristics.
Characteristics of Populations Three important characteristics of a population are its:  geographic distribution  population density  growth rate.
Population Ecology. PopulationPopulation-a group of organisms of one species living in the same place at the same time that interbreed and compete with.
5-1 and 5-2 Population Growth Charles Darwin calculated that a single pair of elephants could increase to a population of 19 million individuals within.
Populations - Chapter 19.
35-1 & 35-2 How Populations Grow
the number of individuals per unit area
Population Growth & Limiting Factors
Ch Notes EQ: What factors affect a population’s size
Chapter 5 Populations.
BIO 1A – Unit 3 Notes.
Chapter 5 Populations.
Unit 3: Populations Chapter 5.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Photo Credit: © Frans Lanting/Minden Pictures, Inc.
Population Dynamics (Predator-Prey relationship).
How Populations Grow 1. What are 3 important characteristics of a population? 2. What is population density? 3. What 3 factors affect population size?
Start-up for 5/5/14 Compare at least 2 differences between primary and secondary succession. What is carrying capacity? How is predation related to carrying.
Populations.
Populations.
Chapter 5 Populations.
How Populations Grow Three important characteristics of a population are geographic distribution, population density, and population growth rate.
Population Growth.
Population Growth Population Density
Population Dynamics Dynamic=“changing”
Characteristics of Populations
Population Dynamics Dynamic=“changing”
Populations Objective: A4 - Analyze how populations & communities respond to abiotic & biotic factors and recognize that long-term survival of a species.
5-1 How Populations Grow List the characteristics used to describe a population. Identity factors that affect population size. Differentiate between exponential.
How do communities change over time?
Presented by Mr. Rainbeau
Growth Populations Photo Credit: 
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Chapter 5 Populations.
How Populations Grow.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
How they grow and what affects them
POPULATIONS.
How Populations Grow Ms. Simons 2015.
Chapter 5 Population Growth.
5-1 and 5-2 Population Growth
Chapter 5 Population Growth.
Chapter 5 Populations.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Chapter 5.1 How Populations Grow.
Populations & Ecological Succession
Populations Chapter 5 Unit 2.
How Populations Grow.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
5-1 and 5-2 Population Growth
Warm Up “What factors might change a population size?”
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 5: Populations Sections 1 and 2

5.1 How Populations Grow Three important characteristics of a population are: 1. Geographic distribution, or range, is the area in which a population lives 2. Population density is the number of individuals per unit area e.g. the number of people per square kilometer; 500 people/km2 3. Growth rate is how quickly a population increases or decreases in size

B. Four factors affect population size 1. Birth rate – how many new individuals are born; ↑ Pop 2. Death rate – how many individuals die; ↓ pop 3. Immigration – the movement of individuals into an area; ↑ pop 4. Emigration – the movement of individuals out of an area; ↓ pop Growth rate = birth – death + immig - emig

C. Exponential growth occurs when members of a population reproduce at a constant rate This growth pattern is shown by a J-shaped curve. As the population grows, the number of reproducing members keeps rising The population grows faster and faster

D. Under ideal conditions with unlimited resources, a population will grow exponentially In nature, exponential growth does not go on for long Resources are used up in over time and growth slows or stops Predators and disease may also slow growth

E. Logistic growth is when limited resources slow or stop population growth Growth pattern is shown by an S-shaped curve Usually follows a period of exponential growth When growth stops, the population size has reached its carrying capacity The number of individuals of a specific species an environment can support The growth rate is zero

During which phase does the population grow most rapidly? During which phase does the population size stabilize? What is the carrying capacity of a population?

5.2 Limits to Growth A. A limiting factor is any resource in short supply that slows population growth Density-dependent – relies on population size; only work when pop density reaches a certain level Competition – organisms are using the same ecological resource at the same time • Food, water, space, sunlight, etc

Density independent – does not rely on Population size Natural disasters Human activities; damming rivers; clearing forests Results in rapid drop in population size

Predation – one organism captures and eats another; can affect the predator and prey populations • Often nature’s way of controlling populations • predator-prey simulation (worksheet-project) http://www.biologycorner.com/worksheets/pred_prey.html Parasitism – one organism feeds off a host Disease – can increase the death rate

What general trends are shown in this graph? What factors other than the predator-prey relationship affected the size of these populations during the time period represented in the graph?